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Talk FNF
Nicki Minaj and DJ Ak CRASHOUT on SZA, Candace Owens BODIES Nick Fuentes, and Superman is NOT Woke
The cultural landscape of hip-hop, media, and entertainment is experiencing seismic shifts, and in this episode, we take you through some of the most compelling narratives unfolding before our eyes.
Nicki Minaj's extended Twitter meltdown takes center stage as we analyze her feud with SZA and what appears to be a troubling pattern of behavior. Combined with Drake's recent losses and Wayne's Super Bowl disappointment, we're witnessing what might be the end of Young Money's dominance in real-time. What drives a superstar to such public displays of insecurity, and why can't she seem to step away from the keyboard?
We also tackle the fascinating intersection of race and media through several lenses. RG3's misguided attempt to defend Angel Reese backfired spectacularly, revealing the pitfalls of performative allyship when executed poorly. Meanwhile, Nick Fuentes' appearance on Candace Owens' show demonstrated how extremist personalities often crumble when removed from their echo chambers, exposing the facade behind their online personas.
The new Superman film sparks a passionate discussion about artistic intent and historical context. Superman has always been political – fighting slumlords in early comics and addressing social injustice throughout his publication history. We break down why criticisms of the film being "too woke" fundamentally misunderstand the character's legacy.
Perhaps most intriguing is our unexpectedly hilarious theory about Azealia Banks' continued relevance despite her controversial behavior. This bizarre saga speaks volumes about celebrity culture and the strange economy of attention in modern entertainment.
Join us for an unfiltered, thought-provoking conversation that pulls no punches while examining the cultural moments that have everyone talking. Whether you're a hip-hop head, movie buff, or cultural observer, this episode delivers fresh perspectives that will have you seeing these controversies in an entirely new light.
So you can't keep using that excuse, like that is a part of the academics brand. So, like to me, you just don't sound like a very competent businessman. Let me see who Marlon.
Speaker 2:Brando is because I know that name.
Speaker 1:I know.
Speaker 2:I know that's a white man. Ok, I just need to know which white man it is. Let me look it up and you can.
Speaker 1:That's the white man of Richard Price's suck Marlon Brando's. Oh, I don't like that rhetoric.
Speaker 2:Don't oh, I don't like that rhetoric. Don't say that, take that out, cut that out. You know sisa is a liar. Like as a person who's been a sisa fan for about a decade now she's been, she's morphed into a completely different person and she's been caught in dozens of lies. We don't care.
Speaker 1:G3 is one of those brothers where you gotta prove the racism to him. Like you know, I'm saying like you ever say like oh, this person will prove it. Like that's rg3. Is that kind of I hate it's like that okay, so because I'm the opposite you gotta prove to me that racism isn't happening, because I'm gonna be like racist.
Speaker 1:I was totally disappointed. I've said on this show before that nick fuentes is probably one of my top white supremacists that I enjoy listening to or just watching little snippets and clips because of the the manner of which he expresses it, this right there. He didn't do like you, really. You didn't show your ass at all, nick fuentes.
Speaker 1:You tucked your little pencil peckerwood again and I was disgusted talk trash, but then like they'll be apologetic once they see you in person like they're one of these kind of guys where they just want to be especially, yeah, and also hate to break this to you too, for all you clowns hating on a superman movie, that's always been what superman's done. He's fought against a ton of people politically, like the old superman used to beat up landlords I wish he still did that charlamagne said something that I don't really agree with. He says there's no value in shock being a shock job literally shock value.
Speaker 2:Superman versus jesus on earth. Superman 10 times out of 10. You know he's watching that little Jesus on Earth.
Speaker 1:Superman 10 times out of 10.
Speaker 2:You know, I might have to agree with you. He's washing that little s***. I think so. This podcast is sponsored by Graffiti Tax Services. For all your tax preparation needs, you can go to GraffitiTaxcom. We're going to put the link right here. It should be somewhere. And yeah, you can head to them for during tax season and if you have any financial or tax preparation questions, head to the Graffiti Tax Services. They're our new sponsor. Thank you to Graffiti Tax Preparation Services. That's it.
Speaker 4:Your whole life is revolved around talking about other people's lives. What the f*** do you think your fucking ass Is doing on that?
Speaker 1:podcast now she has come back from Mecca. She has come back from.
Speaker 2:I have proof look.
Speaker 1:She has come back from black woman Mecca. She went to go see the queen Beyonce in Atlanta.
Speaker 2:I went to Cowboy Carter Night 4, which was like a really good night to go to, because night three and four Jay came out is she still there?
Speaker 1:is she still no? Night four was the last night. Okay, so I went on the last night okay, so do you want to tell us about? You know how it?
Speaker 2:went. So the show was amazing. I look great. I made my outfits from my outfit from scratch. We'll put a picture here because I'm proud of myself and it was a blast. Like she performed for three whole hours. She performed from things from her entire career. Jay came out did PSA Excuse me? He came out. He was like I heard the doom, doom, doom.
Speaker 1:I was like, yeah, immediately, you didn't know how to reintroduce yourself, did you?
Speaker 2:No, I couldn't. I lost my mind. I didn't know who I was to introduce myself.
Speaker 1:And then. So the show ended.
Speaker 2:This is when it gets interesting. The show ended and I'm walking with my friends and then apparently I just take off.
Speaker 1:Just got the zoomies I just took off the zoomies. What, what inspired this and what mindset were you in?
Speaker 2:sometimes, when I'm drunk, I just want to run so you just took off I just took off.
Speaker 1:Oh my goodness, you can tell where this ended, so let's continue.
Speaker 2:Okay, so I take off, not remembering that they have my phone ID, everything, everything. I have nothing. I just took off bare hands, just outfit outfitted cowboy hat just running through Mercedes-Benz Stadium. I don't know why my hands are up while I'm doing the running. That's how you probably was running.
Speaker 2:I probably was drunk as hell running around mercedes-benz stadium so gone out your mind oh, my god, I'm tearing up, oh, my makeup. So when I finally like come to, I'm like holy shit, they're nowhere near me. I'm like looking around for them, I can't find them. So then I eventually I find this like drag queen looking man, so this is after you already left the venue.
Speaker 2:Yeah, so, yeah, okay, um, drag queen looking man. So this is after you already left the the venue. Yeah, so, yeah, okay, I'm like outside the venue when I find them. I didn't like fully leave the vicinity. I was in the vicinity the entire time. I was like three minutes, I didn't walk for that long looking for your friends yeah.
Speaker 2:So, um, I find this like drag queen looking man and his, his, his friend. And then I'm like, oh my god, um, I lost my friend, that I have my phone. So they're like all right, come with us, you can chill in our hotel room, call your, your people or whatever, and wait there until they can come get you. So I'm calling my mom, I'm calling my mom, I'm calling my mom, I'm calling my mom and dad, because those are the only numbers that I know at this point. It's like two, because the show didn't end until like one something.
Speaker 2:I thought it ended at 11. Eight, no, she came out at like nine, okay, so it ended around like Midnight, midnight, yeah, so it's around like two and I cannot get in touch with anybody. So my mom finally picks up and she's like okay, okay, I'm on the way. When I finally get in touch with her, they're like we have a flight or whatever, so you can go wait in the lobby. So then I go downstairs to wait in the lobby. I start freaking out again because the same number that I called my mom on, she can't call me back you can't get in touch with her, okay?
Speaker 2:so I'm calling her on the hotel phone, not picking up the the valet guy. I'm standing outside waiting for her. Maybe half an hour goes by and she's still not there. I'm calling her over and over and over again and she's not picking up. I'm calling my dad too, because my dad has your number. He could call you. I don't know why my mom didn't call you. I was asleep the whole time. I don't know why my mom didn't call you. There's, there's. I was asleep the whole time. If she called you, like it would have, you would have gotten there faster than what she would have done.
Speaker 1:Probably traffic. The way that she described it was just too crazy. Anybody would have been waiting for a minute.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, I forgot. The traffic around Mercedes Benz Stadium was probably absolutely ridiculous.
Speaker 1:You wasn't in.
Speaker 2:OK, let's just get into my baby wasn't in her right mind? No, not at all. I was literally like sobbing the entire time looking like a crazy woman after this.
Speaker 1:So, mind you, she gets back to the house.
Speaker 2:She's rattled so no, this is not even the end. So after I get down to the lobby, I'm like crying in the lobby too because my mom's taking forever. And then, um, this black woman comes down and I'm like, can you please order me an uber and I'll, um, I'll pay you back tomorrow morning. When I get my phone back and everything, I write down her number on a little, her name and her number, she forgot that too on a little piece of paper and then, um, she sends me on my way in an uber and then I sent her the money back the next, the next morning after I got my shit back.
Speaker 1:So so she comes home, frank tick, she tells me she lost her phone. So in my mind I'm thinking she either put it down somewhere and somebody took it, or she got like pickpocketed or some crazy stuff. So I'm starting to look where the phone is, because I have her location. I find it. I'm like, hey, I found your phone. Let's call the authorities, since you think you know someone took it. Well, I don't know, I think one of my friends, man huh, what do you mean? What's? What's the story like? The story doesn't.
Speaker 2:there's no consistency, I was like it's most. When I sat down and I thought about it a little bit more, I was like no, because most likely one of them has it.
Speaker 1:and then I she doesn't explain that to me, though, so I'm saying, like why does she want to just get this going, get the ball rolling on this so we can get her items? I was just so confused the entire moment. Then the next day comes around, right, and I'm sitting, we're going to go find the phone. We're not sure if this is her friend's house, so this could be a monster.
Speaker 2:I'm like. I am like 90% sure, this is my friend's house.
Speaker 1:Like when we were on our way I was like I'm confident that we're on our way to my friend's house right now. So I started to just apply just a little bit of logic in what was going on, because this is trying to figure out why she didn't have any kind of like space for them to meet up, like why was there no preparation? So then I asked a simple question. I said how did y'all get there?
Speaker 1:She says we drove well, one of my friends drove, so you drove, so I'm sitting here. So you drove. That means you parked right. She goes, mind you. She goes, yeah, in the orange section, and yada, yada, yada. So I looked her straight in the face and said then why didn't you walk back to the car and you I didn't no, no, when I was never at the car.
Speaker 2:So back to the car would imply that I was at the car in the first place I got there on a bike she. I knew what deck she was on, so, like the whole deck that's, I don't know. I don't know which level of the deck she was on.
Speaker 1:I also don't know what the fuck her car looks like, but being near the car deck is at least a place where y'all have to the thing that I should have done is just stayed like there's there's stairs at the top that you can like look down on the crowd.
Speaker 2:That's where I should. I should have stayed at the top, at like the highest point, to just look or call security. So there's somebody, just anybody, in the vicinity I went to a hotel that was like right next to the mercedes-ben Stadium, that's not where you're at, though.
Speaker 1:Yeah, like everything was just a bad decision.
Speaker 2:But that was after I was there for a while.
Speaker 1:I just felt like, if you just and this is why I just get so worried when you get more intoxicated than you probably should and you go out, because it's like if you just would have took like five seconds just to just breathe in, realize what was going on.
Speaker 2:You probably could have avoided.
Speaker 1:It was 85 percent of what that happened all anxiety, that's all it was. It was alcohol and anxiety.
Speaker 2:Aa that's what you are, yeah. So, um, we aren't. We're on our way to my friend's house and then my friend finally calls me back on instagram and she's like she has your stuff. And I was like, okay, well, we're on our way to my friend's house. And then my friend finally calls me back on Instagram and she's like she has your stuff. And I was like, okay, well, we're on our way there.
Speaker 7:And then I got my stuff.
Speaker 2:I was just worried because I had taken my work phone with me and I was like child. I don't need to be losing my work phone. Dance where you do, charlie. Make you dance where you do.
Speaker 3:Make you dance where you do. Let the music in the play where you do. Almost there, you could dance where you do. Charlie, make you dance where you do. You could dance where you do. You could dance For the vibe.
Speaker 3:I've been out for days, steady chasing the party, concentrate. Anytime I do, whether night or day, I do magic, even normally the goodie. Dance to the goodie, the goodie feel like rain, cause anything. We are just then go drop a chain, weather night or day. I dey have my dreams. I dey have my dreams. Kiss it, kiss it, kiss it, kiss it, kiss it, kiss it, kiss it, baby, kiss it, kiss it.
Speaker 3:How many times then go tell the person you know they pay to. They learn the lesson. Shama, ya, bring me the bag and you survive anytime you do. I know your time, I know your vibrations spring in my name. Play it, dance.
Speaker 3:Where do tell me me could dance? Where do make it dance? Where do let the music in the play? Where do almost say you could dance? Where do tell me me could dance? Where do you could dance, baby, you could dance. So tell me what you wanna do tonight. You know dem party. No, go, make sense. If you never did it. Make the party come alive. We gonna 0-2 to 0-3. My love best seat, allah. So, baby, tell me what you wanna she body, make you do as you like. Now, steady with the bloody canine, Blow some threes. Make you feel alive. I no feel like man, I'm wasted and I'm standing with the bloody cana. Blow some trees. Make a failure. I don't feel like man, I'm wasted and I'm feeling reckless. Now I'll buy like a liquor. That's why I'm working on patience. I'm just a joke on my paycheck and then I sleep with the wicked. So go back, we'll go back tonight. Come on, baby, kiss, kiss, kiss.
Speaker 4:Kiss I can't say kiss, nigga, you must be sick. Oh, you took a bowl about is just get rich. Choke my neck, nigga, and ice my bitch. Beat the system with chains and wicks. This is culturally inappropriate. You run from the spirit of repossession. Too much enamel covers your necklace. I buy bitches. You buy obsessions. You buy watches. I buy collections. Misery's fueling your aggression. Jealousy's turned into obsession. Reality TV is mud wrestling. Some sign checks. I know better than Beware of my name that there's delicate. You know, I know where you're delicate. I will close your heaven for the hell of it.
Speaker 2:Chains and whips I need to listen to that album Because they were spitting.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I mean a lot of people was rocking with it, but I got the sense that it was a lot of just the old nigga function. It was like one of them kind of albums, but yeah 100% yeah.
Speaker 2:If you hear clips, it's for the old nigga function. But if you like bars, then you probably enjoy it too.
Speaker 1:This depends, depends, but you're now listening to the greatest podcast in the world functions, but if you like, if you like bars, then you probably enjoy it too. This depends, depends. But you're now listening to the greatest podcast in the world talk f and f tv. I'm your host absurd rhetoric and I'm with my lovely and amazing and gorgeous co-host, miss farrah hi guys or young nigga drip on that's.
Speaker 2:I feel like a fly young nigga for real. It's just a scarf and the loose pants. I'm wearing all loose clothes a hat and a scarf, so yeah I'm here to do do the business and the science yeah, and you look like the teacher that's about to give me detention no, it's not.
Speaker 1:It's not the look I was going for no, that's the look that you got going on. This is way.
Speaker 2:Flyer drip, then teacher drip you have on a fucking button-down shirt and khakis.
Speaker 1:That's how you're supposed to do journalism.
Speaker 2:Like what are you talking about?
Speaker 1:You went to journalism school. This is how you're supposed to. This is a fit to do journalism?
Speaker 3:Nigga ain't got no drip whatsoever.
Speaker 1:This is the drippest for journalism. This is journalism drip.
Speaker 2:None, you don't even understand. You can't just have clothes on.
Speaker 1:You can't even comprehend it, honestly that's really where we're at with it. I hate when you open your mouth about anything related to fashion or clothes. Well, close your ears, because he, he has, he owns so many polos. I secretly throw out his clothes on a regular basis I've seen that you've been doing that, but I'm gonna return a favor in a little bit don't I spend so much more money on my clothes?
Speaker 1:than you do. No, it's okay. That just means I don't have to throw as many To equal. That's all. I can just throw a piece away here and there. No, yeah, you wouldn't notice, you haven't noticed, so it's not fun when it's the when the rabbit got the gun.
Speaker 2:You did that too late.
Speaker 1:It's post. All right, your girl, nicki Minaj, is clearly a ticking time bomb that we have to continue to investigate, because she just she's insane.
Speaker 2:She's on another co-brand.
Speaker 1:She's no, it's farther than that.
Speaker 2:This has to be like a binger now, because this is at least been going on for like a week that she's been doing this. So I think it was Punch Like the way this all started, from what I believe.
Speaker 1:This particular portion of it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, Punch tweeted something. Broken Barbies, right, I think that was it what he posted. It's a song that's about to come out. I don't know whose song it is, but it's a song apparently. That's what everybody's been saying, that it's a song. Apparently that's what everybody's been saying, that it's a song he's been pushing, but yeah, I still haven't heard who's the artist. It probably hasn't dropped yet. And then, um, it's the. I think it's the, the newer like contemporary alternative black girl that they um signed recently. You talked about her on here before yes so I think it's her song.
Speaker 2:I can't remember her name. And then sZA tweets um mercury and retrograde. Don't take the bait silly.
Speaker 1:Okay, well, you missed that because in between that nikki responded to that, she started to go before before the retro before okay because I have it right here where she, after he tweets that she says she posts a picture of a very unflattering picture of punch and says me after I suck some good zik, guarantee you wouldn't fight a man, guarantee you wouldn't. You wouldn't fight a man. You have every tweet of your incessant bullying, lying and more. Your name was added to that shit list. Shitty draws. Same thing that makes you laugh, makes you dot dot dot shit.
Speaker 2:That's what she said what does that even mean?
Speaker 1:like. Then she broke down what TDE means, tiny dick executive. And then she said y'all remember? When doo doo on the beats was feeling his doo doo. Now he's sitting in it. I'm just it's going on what she's going on she like for.
Speaker 2:For somebody who technically is a wordsmith, your tweets be not making any sense and then it doesn't seem eloquent at all. It seems like like papa bear tweeted like you taking you got jokes from papa bear for real.
Speaker 1:Yeah, then I'm just saying like kind of like the retweets and the stuff that she was doing in between, and then the mercury and retrograde happens, and then she goes to sisa go draw your freckles back on bookie, and then she does her weird little hashtags that she's been doing for uh perez's daughter liar, liar pants on fire, sounding like a fucking dead dog. I don't know what that means.
Speaker 2:I think she talked about her singing, yeah, okay yeah, because a lot of people think that scissor doesn't sound great.
Speaker 1:Live and then she says bitch, looking like bitch, looking and sounding like she got stung by a fucking bee, dot dot dot.
Speaker 2:Draw on my fake freckles and then talking about the freckles again. Like we know, sisa is a liar. Like as a person who's been a sisa fan for about a decade now she's been. She's morphed into a completely different person and she's been caught in dozens of lies. We don't care. The songwriting ability overshadows all of the lies. Like it really doesn't matter. The freckles are fake, we don't care. Like there's so many BBLs, fake tits, fake this fake that weaves. Nobody cares about her drawing on her freckles and to bring it up twice is just like childish.
Speaker 1:And then she said another thing. She said bitch used to be on twitter dissing rihanna sierra, etc. Then when it's time to suck zik suck zik is insane and get the opportunities from them. She drew them freckles on and got to sucking right, allegedly like bitch. Stop being jealous of women who you secretly would kill to be up their assholes.
Speaker 1:These men that's very ironic, because that's, I feel like that's how a lot of people think nikki minaj behaves then she says these men putting batteries in y'all backs and y'all stupid enough to keep it going and peeping, that is not going to end well for them.
Speaker 2:That's also ironic, because some people would say that that's exactly what wayne did with you.
Speaker 1:But then sZA didn't respond. She said I get bullied by millions online every day. Then step my ass on a packed stage tour where people show me real love in real life. My parents are healthy. I think that's a crazy shot to say to anybody and I'm the most successful I've ever been uh, get some fucking perspective and bark at a wall. And then she says I don't give a fuck about none of that weird shit, you popping that.
Speaker 1:I think that was actually her first response yeah to uh to nikki was about the weird shit you popping. And then it ends and I think that would have been enough. But now they end up going back and forth. Nikki has just hasn't let up since no, she hasn't. She called her ugly I was about to go to that tweet. That was my next one that I had put up. She didn't just call ugly, she said shut up shut up ugly.
Speaker 2:Shut up ugly that's like saying shut up ugly is like you're a middle school bully.
Speaker 1:But then this is when you know the coke is is in the brain as well. I'm in a meeting, so I don't know if you're still talking shit or not. So if you didn't, I'll delete later like why don't you just not tweet?
Speaker 3:that shit.
Speaker 2:And then, no, it was I'll delete later period ho, like she, she finished. And then she was like let me add a little, a little seasoning to it. To the end, like it was unnecessary and you could have just not tweeted that then she started posting like more unflattering pictures.
Speaker 1:A punch and sizzle it, man. It just goes on like she's been. She has not let up since this moment yeah.
Speaker 2:And then there was that one long tweet like oh does, because. Then after that, sza said I'm gonna go back to being shy and myself and blah, blah, blah. And she basically said I'm gonna start, I'm gonna go back to ignoring her. And uh, sza started retweeting like there were a couple, she has a couple things about to go diamond and she's retweeting that and obviously, like that's part of the shade, throwing the timing of like when you're retweeting your successes and Nikki sends out this long ass tweet starting with like wait, does SZA think that she's more successful than me? Just mean bully energy, you can go, let me read it me. Just mean bully energy, you can go, let me read it. Because she said wait, the sisa thinks she's more successful than me. Lol, y'all catch me up please, sisa.
Speaker 2:If every song you've ever done vanished right now, the music business would never even miss you. Yes, we would like. I'm not in the music business, but fans would miss her for sure. Um, I've been to countries that never heard of you. I know you're not that stupid. Are you stadiums? Did you look at the venues? I played on my own headline festival tour out of the country last year. Bitch, have you ever headlined to 60k people bitch um. What have you ever done besides yodel with auto-tune that needed um retuning? Boo, I'm an icon. You're not the end. Pay that man for almost breaking his back. We still trying to figure out who this man is and what house is a broke his setback like? Is it literal or figuratively, I don't know, but what the inquiring minds would like to know. Please, nikki, like one more tweet, tell us about this man. Um she. And then she continues why didn't you speak up when your exec was bullying and harassing me? Your dirty mangy c word? You?
Speaker 2:don't need to um, these bottled numbers on your platforms have you losing your mother effing minds? You the type that would that would have been quiet in school, trying to fit in? She if you listen to sZA's music, she was that type for sure. Like she was very insecure. Um, it's very, it's deep. Like she. She bears her soul to us. Uh, you still have no clue who you are. I know you went nights without watching you washing your musty face. She, I agree with that. She says I'm a barefoot forest energy. She's definitely going to sleep. Who hasn't gone to sleep without washing their face, though, at one point or another?
Speaker 1:but she never had a lit night out. But sizzle gives it off like that was a habit, like more than it was a like she was having a relaxing night and still didn't watch her face like normal behavior, like that was just the thing that she was doing especially early sisa and then she continues bitch, how do, how, how you remember exactly where every freckle goes?
Speaker 2:so this is the third freckle, fake, fresh freckle, mention um. And then she continues justice for demore. Desire perez, we want to discuss your daughter's lawsuit, and did you?
Speaker 3:do your your desposition.
Speaker 2:Okay, deposition like why? How do you end it with that?
Speaker 1:but then it doesn't stop there, because everyone begins to talk about this, no, I mean like that tweet.
Speaker 2:How do you end that?
Speaker 1:oh no I'm just saying like this this still hasn't even stopped, because no academics gets involved somehow, because his academics tv page, which we all know he has told everybody he does not run as the posts are not from him. But that gets a reaction, because what they did was they post a picture and they deleted it already, but they posted a picture of sisa dressed like a muslim, uh, wearing traditional muslim garb, traditional christian garb and, I think, traditional like buddha, buddha or hindu guard and say one day she muslim, next day she christian.
Speaker 1:Yeah. So I thought that was hilarious, but that ended up getting pulled pump. You see me punch uses it as an opportunity to then go at academics and trying to basically g check him. The opportunity to then go at academics and trying to basically g-check him regarding who's doing the posting or whatnot.
Speaker 1:Academics tries to like act like he's talking about some drake beef types of like. That's the one thing I hate about academics and a lot of the gentlemen. That kind of follow sue him where you know what someone's talking about. But then you'll purposely try to lead the conversation, especially on the internet, because you know it's a respond based thing. He tries to pull the conversation act like he was talking about drake. He was like, bro, I'm not talking about any, I'm talking about who is the person pressing sin on these posts for this page, because this page be wild. He ends up then conceding to that point and saying, like you know, he has had conversations with his people and telling them to relax on certain things, not to talk about people who are not celebrities that are associated to them. But overall I just feel as though we we kind of just see where academics has put himself in a position where he has to kind of take responsibility for that page, because it has his name on it and those people work for him 100%, yeah, I think.
Speaker 1:I think he keeps trying to use that as a scapegoat. But it's not going to keep working over and over. Like these are your men, you get.
Speaker 2:Like you may not approve what actually goes out, but if you make the call to get it deleted, it's going to come down if you're the one who hired, if your name is on the the paperwork, you own the thing and you hired the people who send all of the stuff out and press post, then you're responsible. You're completely 100 responsible for it.
Speaker 1:Like you have to understand when you use your name to leverage other people clout wise on the internet, you're gonna be responsible for that, regardless if it's you. So you can't keep using that excuse like that is a part of the academics brain. So, like to me, you just don't sound like a very competent businessman when you keep trying to run to that. Clout is a dangerous game and you seen him. He was all out this weekend. Um, he was talking trash about a whole bunch of people because he was out on boats and stuff he was on vacation just looking.
Speaker 2:Why did academic get those braids?
Speaker 1:I don't think his hair thick enough for that there, it's not like that. It's not a good look when your hair kind of strings out at the end it's string from root to end, it's not just at the end, it's not even even the the part like look a little bit light it looks like it's holding on for dear life, like to me he seemed like he would be cool just being a short mid-throw nigga, like I don't understand what's the obsession with anything other than just just be a bald, fat nigga with a beard.
Speaker 1:But he don't gotta be bald, he can just be a little bit of hair. He doesn't need a little afro. Go get a haircut every two weeks like a normal nigga. I think that's probably the reason why he don't like getting his haircut, because getting your haircut puts you in a situation where you get into a routine and you gotta trust like a nigga. And I just think he's just so paranoid just like if you hear the way he discusses and talks about it he's so paranoid about the optics of surround of his surroundings that I don't think he would even. I think that's part of the reason why he looks like that, because out of fear yeah, and genetics.
Speaker 2:So let's get back to Nikki. Why do you think she's been crashing out so often?
Speaker 1:I mean, we talked about it last time. I just think she just feels like she's falling off, even if it isn't, her numbers are showing that. I think she feels like that's what's happening.
Speaker 2:Like her, her world is crashing in out on her and she's just projecting that to the world do you think that if drake didn't lose terribly like he did in this last beef that she would feel like that? Because drake losing the beef and then wayne crashing out about not getting the super bowl, it it's like the holy Young Money Trinity has completely fallen before our eyes.
Speaker 1:No, I don't think so, because I think this was incredible. And then Wayne put out that garbage album to everybody else.
Speaker 2:I didn't listen to it, but unfinished garbage beats just throwaway songs of an album and everyone's kind of like young. We lost young money.
Speaker 1:Thank god, we enjoyed young money in its prime because no, I mean the fall off is is evident, at least with with the standpoint with her, and I don't want to mean it in a way where I'm trying to like say she's a bad artist. Anyway, I think she can come out and make good music still to this day, she can still drop a bop it's just it's just the relevancy and the currency that she has built amongst the industry is just falling through.
Speaker 1:Now there's no more weight to it and I don't think people want to continue to work with that, like it's already hard to work with, like an egotistical man. But working with an egotistical woman can even be like a bigger draw on to you because, like the, the things that women can say, especially new york women, when they're frustrated, upset, where they feel like they paying you, doing what like the stuff that y'all will say to somebody can wear on you longer than would be maybe a male that can do that and who can also earn a little bit more potentially in that regard too. So they can yeah?
Speaker 1:immediate gut check. So and I think that's just what hers she's just feeling that where she hasn't played ball with enough people because she thought she was the superstar that wayne treated her like and all that other stuff, which is cool when you don't have competition that's why I think that her tweets were ironic, because I feel like she's projecting her own, like what she thought she was onto.
Speaker 2:What scissor thinks that she is?
Speaker 1:yeah, to me she. She feels a certain way, because she's been doing this for years, about showing her accolade. She feels a certain way about herself that she doesn't feel she receives back from others. I think it's very evident, and because that's why it feels like, are you trying to convince us of how good you are? Are you trying to convince yourself?
Speaker 2:that's crazy because, regardless of what nikki does there, she has a core fan base that is so fiercely loyal. She could literally like diarrhea on a track and like they would be tweeting and hashtagging to make it go number one as hard as they could like. So I don't know. I feel like sometimes. Do you feel like sometimes, when people are black famous, they don't, they don't appreciate it enough?
Speaker 2:I think, when it's not that they don't appreciate it and I'm not saying nikki's, just black famous, but I think she's in an icon 100 irrefutably to black people no for sure I think she's 100, everything you just said.
Speaker 1:But what I think is a hard realization and we talked about this a little bit with taraji p henson is understanding that black famous and then famous in general. That just means different like. So you could be top, top five black famous and be 80 80 regular famous you know what?
Speaker 1:I'm saying so. You're not always going to feel that when you walk into certain rooms in certain places, like she's big star. Everybody's talked to her. She's been on sitcom shows where people made jokes about or reference her, so it's not like she's a nobody she's an icon, but at the same token she's an icon to us.
Speaker 2:I would say I don't know why people would call her an icon yeah, I don't, I don't know either I think they would say that she's, she was a top act or she was a female icon, for sure I think if she, um, kept on her pop run for a little bit longer I know she absolutely hated that part of her career, but I think if she kept on that that path for a little bit longer, or know she absolutely hated that part of her career, but I think if she kept on that that path for a little bit longer, or like sprinkled it into like every little album, kind of like rihanna does, I feel like she did do that.
Speaker 1:I just feel like they never like she had one or two of them that really hit, but it most people just wanted to hear a rap I don't know, I didn't, I don't know, because that one song, her and drake was kind of poppy when they was like the moment for life that
Speaker 2:was, but that was very early, that was on pink friday. That was her first album that started off the thing. Yeah, I'm saying she did do that and then she stopped doing it in the later albums pink friday had a longevity. She had hit after hit after hit after hit on pink friday.
Speaker 1:I know she was singing on pink friday one and two a lot. She had songs on her where she was singing a lot yeah, she, she used to sing a lot even her old manager.
Speaker 2:Waka flaka's mom said that that was something that she wanted to do a lot with I would. I'll give you the first two albums. She did more like poppy stuff, but then I think after the like will, I am era like that song that she did I think she is just a hip-hop star.
Speaker 1:I don't think there's any limitations to her and I think Nikki's dope. I just think she just needs to relax, like put the, put the drugs down she can't and relax she can't.
Speaker 2:I think that's the problem too her, she. I feel like she made a mistake with this man, because anybody could just refer to your husband's a rapist, like that's a L, like that's a card that anybody could pull out on you, and everyone has that on you, and you can't even defend yourself, and then so is your brother. Wow.
Speaker 2:Like and then your sister not helping you much with her reality. She on not even Zeus. She's on now. That's tv or something like that. Like bottom of the barrel. She might as well be like um doing street fights for money just fist fist fighting in the streets. That's what her, his sister, her sister's doing.
Speaker 1:That's what it looked like that's what she's been doing for a while I feel like her personal life.
Speaker 2:from our perspective, not knowing this woman at all, this looks kind of a mess, like she's in a corner and now she got to just swing and crash out about shit.
Speaker 1:I think this is just. It's horrible just to see like we talked about her legacy last time just to see where it's turned to and what it probably end up going to be what people remember her for.
Speaker 2:And I think maybe if she takes some time away, we can forget and then we'll just remember the good stuff and then she can kind of she's gonna have to take a lot of time away and then she gonna have to come out and do like a young money tour or like a you know, like something nostalgic that makes us remember the old Nikki and not the crash out queen radio Nikki, even though there were some very iconic like. When she crashes out it's iconic, I mean, it has been like, I mean it has been historically.
Speaker 1:But when that becomes your thing, that you over and over and you keep doing it, it just gets played out and tired, especially when there isn't really a message behind. It's not like you're galvanizing people to stop something that's affecting a large swarm of the artist community. It's like, no, you're just mad because somebody is picking somebody else over you at the end of the day, and then you just try to paint it all this particular way, so I hate to see it, but we will just finish it up with that.
Speaker 1:But man, it's just, it's awful. It really is like nikki you are. I remember being the kid when she first came out who was just obsessed with just the imagery that she put out. The music was dope, but like she was, she was super fine.
Speaker 1:I'm not gonna hold you like she was fine, and just to see you acting like this crazy old woman in in from 20 years now seems like I had pink friday, like the album, the physical album and I played the absolute crap out of that album I remember her when she was with gucci like that's the time when I used, when I got onto her when she was doing like early walk of her, early gucci, when, when he made that joke about them fucking her, when gucci said, well, we fucked up I don't remember that.
Speaker 2:But itty bitty piggy will always be my shit always that gucci crash out was legendary.
Speaker 1:I can't believe you forgot that. All right, uh, let's see, let's get into. So did you see what was going on on the breakfast club?
Speaker 2:um, no, because that little white boy I don't know who, he is neon you can tell us about that?
Speaker 1:he's not a white boy, though he's a indian packy stanny mix, but uh, so he's a streamer. We talked about him before on the show. He's part of like that like not the kaisa, not you know cool guy streamer community. He's really kind of like the opposite or like I wouldn't say rejects per se, but they're like the counterculture to what you see modern with the streamers. These guys talk trash but then like they'll be apologetic once they see you in person, like they're one of these kind of guys where they just want to be especially their pussies.
Speaker 1:He yeah neon's one of those guys who he did a lot of rage bait content where he would just say things. He would, you know, react in a way that he felt like I'm showing my masculinity in this moment. He was a kid, he was like 15, 16 doing all this, but he said a lot of crazy stuff and in his defense he was doing that to kind of rally up his base.
Speaker 2:And also, you can't like look like a sucker, like part of that streaming community, and why you have guys always talking tough and looking crazy online, it's because you can't look like you're a beta you can't look like, even though he's, because that's the worst thing you could do to these types of guys is look like a beta, because then you lose all their respect, you lose your fan base, you lose all your money and so, and then it just makes you an easier mark.
Speaker 1:So this is where he came on to the breakfast club. They basically did it's similar what ddg did, where he streamed the interview and then they played interview and I ended up checking out the interview. Uh, it definitely wasn't really a fair. I'll let y'all listen to it before we get into it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I didn't listen to it no, no, I love Jewish people.
Speaker 4:Shalom you just came on here to just shit on everybody, nah, nah, nah, I mean wow. I got so many Jewish friends. What, oh my God.
Speaker 3:Nah, you trying to get me caught up, brother. Brother is great why you put the.
Speaker 2:A at the end. Brother is hilarious. That was crazy. What's the?
Speaker 1:craziest situation.
Speaker 6:You can't say that I've seen you in Harlem with Jim Jones.
Speaker 1:What's the craziest situation? Dubai. What was the craziest situation you've been in that you didn't think you was going to make it out besides Dubai? I've?
Speaker 3:been in a lot of situations.
Speaker 6:There's a Nate Diaz thing, same thing trolling. I saw that he chased you, he chased me. I'm not going to figure out like, where is like using?
Speaker 1:Harriet Tubman as a slur, and you know the things you said on that video. I'm just wondering, like, what was your perception?
Speaker 6:Real quick. So you guys do understand like. So, first off, trolling trolling is not okay, right, but there, like, a lot of people have like back then, like as even if it's as a joke, it's not, it's not good to do, but streamer world, youtube world, whatever it is like. People make jokes like that, but like back then before, like they are one race of people no, oh no, you gotta see my no.
Speaker 6:No, ma'am, you gotta see my clips, my clips. I so no, I'm not gonna repeat it, but I'm I'm not gonna repeat it. But. But there's no, there's not like there's no, there's no singling out, there's none of that. I was just insanely toxic. I make jokes about, I make jokes about indians, everyone, like any race you can imagine. It's not like singling out one so.
Speaker 2:So let me ask you a question really quickly. Did you watch the whole interview? I watched most of it. Was he coming from what? Because from this clip it seems like he's changed whatever content he's doing and he's not doing the the rage bait trolling shit anymore and he's coming from like a like I grew from this and I don't do want to do this, and I know that this is wrong. Is that the sentiment he had? So?
Speaker 1:mostly now. If you kind of watch a little bit of his streams, he's been streaming with aiden ross more often than than not. So what he'll do, he's kind of played himself into that role a little bit, where he isn't doing that as much because of kind of the blowback, so like one of the things where what he would used to do and how he used to operate, there was a guy who I don't know if you've seen him, but he's another guy who does content where he talks about gambling. He talked about how he all the the casinos and they kick him out. He has all these tattoos and stuff.
Speaker 1:He talked about how he did a stream, uh, with neon. He did some content with neon and neon came to the house like two to three hours before the shoot time so that everybody who came in who was working and who was doing stuff he could introduce himself to say, hey, this is my name, his real name and all this other stuff. He says in a few hours I'm going to be somebody different and I don't want you to feel like that. If this isn't cool with you, like just tell me.
Speaker 2:That's so interesting to me because these streamers are actors essentially yeah like I've been. I've been like watching a little bit more of it and getting more into the clips in the different houses and stuff and they like put on a show and they're like really good actors you know they turn up, but he like literally that's what a dude said he would go in and he waited till every everybody who came in yeah to work.
Speaker 1:If he was working on behind the scenes or in front, he would introduce himself and say that exact same thing. I'm going to be a different way in a few hours. That's not something that you, like you know. You can just go away from me, or you, we can do something. You can let me know or somebody around me know, but when I'm on this camera, I'm gonna have to be on, I'm gonna have to be turned up because that's what my fan base wants from me. And once I heard that, I just kind of got to understand. Like, like you said, these guys are just, they're living a facade and he's just going through that arc of. I was crashing out because one of the things he did beforehand there was a dance in new york called the naughty dance. I don't know if you're familiar with that and it was basically you're. You look like you're stabbing yourself because they were talking about you're stabbing a dude who name was like naughty or something like that I had, I have no idea it was a gang thing.
Speaker 1:I'll see too old hun so he did that on stream and people were telling him what he was doing. He still kept doing it during this interview. I think some of the stuff that I didn't like was the fact that charlamagne said something that I don't really agree with. He said there's no value in shock being a shock job, literally.
Speaker 2:Shock value is a term for a reason, because there is value in shock. Like you gotta. You gotta make it provocative, you gotta get the people going.
Speaker 2:To me it just sounds so insane because for some reason he tried to act like to sniff seats yeah, they talked about that during the interview when, when people left like charlamagne's whole, like they had a, they used to have compilations on breakfast clubs of like his, his most shocking moments and those are the moments that went the most viral. Charlamagne saying that shop doesn't have any value after Birdman walking out is one of your best clips. After Ray J crashing out got you on the map is crazy. No, it's insane how quick we forget.
Speaker 1:It's a revisionist history. If you ask me yeah, that's exactly what he's trying to do to try to not show that. No, that's where you come from. The thing about what you do is you get famous from the shock and then you apologize on your back end. That's all you got to do. That's exactly what this boy is doing and that's what Charlamagne is doing.
Speaker 1:Yeah, charlamagne did that, and so for him to try to paint this picture, that's what kind of bothered me about it, and I wanted to see if you had seen any clips about it, because a lot of people were saying, oh, they went across the line. I think Aiden Ross. Even he sent a comment to Neon Stream during an interview and he was saying like yo, they're trying to press you, they're trying to make you look crazy. He did crazy. He did this one thing I hate that people on his side are trying to make them say free palestine, like that's supposed to be some type of code word of showing that you're free or something. I hate stupid stuff like that. But there was this point where I'm looking at him like charlamagne is so full of it, because the only reason you're going at neon, the way that you're going on is because he's not into your crew. If this was somebody who was in your network or in your show was sitting there, it showed um, anybody any like say he cool with kai.
Speaker 1:He kept speaking highly of kai.
Speaker 1:If there were any of those gentlemen there, you wouldn't be bringing that kind of vigor, and even though that's the reason why I enjoyed the breakfast club was because you got interviews like that where you press people, you put them on and hit the fire, so for them to bring it out now, when we haven't really seen it like that in a while, to me is really lame, like even just hilarious. Was acting really insane up there, like she's got some odd I feel like they, they felt like they could bully oh, for sure yeah, you can tell you didn't.
Speaker 2:But you don't think they kind of pressed ddg a little bit when he was up there?
Speaker 1:not as much as they was doing with neon okay, I couldn't speak to it because I didn't see this yeah, the one that I saw with ddg was pretty fair game and I thought they gave him ample opportunity to speak. Uh, they wasn't. They was cutting neon off, they was, uh, trying to, you know, bring up old stuff and convolute a bunch of different things that happen. So, like even one of the questions hold on. I'll let you go, but one of the questions I didn't like, that jess hilarious asked where she was like how do we I can believe that you change and that's not to me. That's not a proper way to get that conversation or to get the desired answer, not shawty, that was just swinging out homophobic sirs like a couple months ago, like come on like.
Speaker 1:To me it would have been better, would have been like to give him examples of ways that he changed, like give us examples of things you've done to show that you've changed. That would have been maybe a better question, but I could just tell they were attacking him. They were trying to highlight his chat and some of the racist stuff they were saying in chat, like it just felt very bad faith, more so than their interviews have been of recent.
Speaker 2:Do you think they they brought him up there just to like flame him?
Speaker 1:Well, Charlamagne tried to bring that up too, where he said, well, if we were being assholes, we wouldn't bring you up, and I feel like that's big cap.
Speaker 2:Because we would bring you up just to be assholes. If you have a big enough platform, then sure.
Speaker 1:Yeah, if it's beneficial to both of us. He's pulling in hundreds of thousands of people in his streams. Yeah, it's very worth it. So that's what I mean. Charlamagne does these things where he tries to paint himself like he's like.
Speaker 2:Holier than thou.
Speaker 1:Yeah than he's ever been. It's just like dude, that's not you. You're great at what you do because you've been doing it for as long as you have, and you cut through and aren't scared to be like hey, that was always the highlight of my show. You cut through and you were not scared to ask the question. Everybody in the room wanted to know yes, and I feel like we've lost that to a degree with him.
Speaker 2:Like we're not getting that. This was a little. Do you think it was just bullying a little bit? Yeah, I think it was.
Speaker 1:I can say it just to me, like we've talked about with the Joy Taylor interview he was. He had a lot of tack with that question. They carried that interview where we still got what we wanted to hear, but we didn't have to put her, make her an embarrassment.
Speaker 2:They didn't do that with him. Do you think that's because Charlamagne feels like he has to be more careful with women now? Because of his track record.
Speaker 1:For sure, like he has to be more careful with women now because of his track record for sure, I think.
Speaker 2:I think the biggest fear charlamagne has is somebody saying oh, let's go talk to that girl in south carolina, like, like joseph do you think that if neon is a woman they would have had the same like vitriol and like everything for for her, that they would?
Speaker 1:yeah, if said the same things. I think so. If that girl was out of the loop like Neon was, but had the same kind of statements and the same kind of outrage that Neon had been responsible for, I think 100% they would do that. I can see that. To me, the problem is when it's in-house and you don't bring that same energy in-house to the people that are coming up. Now we haven't got a dope interview like that in a while for me, if you ask me.
Speaker 2:I think I don't really watch breakfast club anymore.
Speaker 1:I think a lot of them have been softballs. I think there's been, here and there, good questions and good moments, but this was the first time I seen them do a full court press on somebody you know a long time. This is like I'm talking about. Lauren la rosa was in on it so one more question, though.
Speaker 2:When you say that, it makes me think the people who know there would be a full court press on them, do you think they're going to breakfast club like? A lot of people are now scared to go to breakfast club. A lot of people go up there and be like I was scared to do this. Interview people who you think like wouldn't like why are? You scared to do this interview?
Speaker 1:yeah neon's kind of that's kind of his thing, where it's like best part of is disrespecting him, like that's kind of, where he's kind of taking his content a little bit, because he had this one not too long ago. He was with this rapper and he was playing basketball and even after the dude missed, he'd be like give me the ball back and then neon would just give him the ball back and then let him neon, basically let him beat him and basketball, even though neon plays the ball really good. So I.
Speaker 2:That's where I don't get that, because if he can't look like a beta. But this is his new thing now. This is this.
Speaker 1:Oh, this is the new person, because at first he would talk trash. Then when they talked that, he would get you know act. I'm sorry, my bad, but like that was part of his thing that he would do, like that was also a big part. But he would talk big trash when it was just him sitting in the room, nobody to check him. But anytime somebody checked him he would fold and that would be part of his character. Okay, so he was always a big pussy.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that was part of his character in that regard, he's just a bigger pussy.
Speaker 1:Now the instigating. I think the instigating is what stopped it.
Speaker 1:So now he does, because he don't have to do it anymore, because he has a platform no, but everybody knows what he's done in the past so they could just rehash those old moments. So every time you say or do something, they just rehash those moments with you and all that. So uh to me, like I said, I I feel bad for him but I think in the same way this is kind of like part of his angle and he can kind of use this as a moment. I thought it was really just lame on their behalf because they even dapping man up, they was just giving him the pound. They didn't give him no handshake or nothing when he was leaving. Is a pound not fine for bro? You could get his man adapt.
Speaker 1:You could shake this man hand after you just did that interview with him at the very least we didn't talk about rg3 when he originally did this, because I just didn't feel like talking about RG3's dumbass. We kind of already kind of gathered that when we talked about him with Ryan Clark and what happened. But his stupidity knows no bounds. So he comes out and I guess he calls himself trying to defend Angel Reese and discuss RG3 is one of those brothers. I guess he calls himself trying to defend Angel Reese and discuss RG3 is one of those brothers where you got to prove the racism to him. Like you know what I'm saying, like you ever say like oh, this person will prove it, like that's RG3. Is that kind of I hate niggas like that Okay.
Speaker 2:Because I'm the opposite you got to prove to me that racism isn't happening, because I'm going to be like racist.
Speaker 1:I never brought this up to you, but last time we talked about that. But there was a man by the name of ron parker, right? And he was on espn. He was a decorated journalist very well known, he'd like to say. He was on with skip on first take and whatnot, and he got fired from espn. You know what he got fired for? Espn racism nope. This is a black guy, oh, he got fired from ESPN. You know what he got fired from ESPN Racism Nope.
Speaker 2:He's a black guy.
Speaker 1:He got fired. Well, it's kind of racism. He got fired for calling RG3 a cornball brother. This is like 2012. What? This is like 2012, 2013,. Around that time.
Speaker 2:Bro, if. I. I would have been fired 17 times.
Speaker 1:He called him a cornball brother and since that moment, rg3 has done nothing but assure everyone that Rob Parker was correct. Even though Rob Parker has got back on TV, he's been on the radio again he's regained that clout. Every time RG3 opens his mouth, every time he tweets, he reassures the world that Rob Parker was right.
Speaker 2:So fill us in, because give the people some context.
Speaker 1:He's in trouble for some tweets that he put out against not against, but pertaining to Angel Reese. So I'll read a little bit of the first paragraph, and a little bit just to kind of, because it was an entire thesis. Now he did go off'll read a little bit of the first paragraph, uh, and a little bit just to kind of because it was an entire thesis no, he did go off on it a little bit he wrote a essay, so he says all right, this has got to stop.
Speaker 1:There's no place for race. Can we explain the picture?
Speaker 2:I'm about to get it. Okay, I was gonna get into. I thought you were gonna.
Speaker 1:This is part of what he says in the first paragraph. There's no place for racism in this world. Whether you like a play or not, angel reach never be called or depicted as a monkey. I've been quiet on the angel reese front. No, you haven't nigga. What are you talking about? Because she shared a video that aided in my wife, kids, family and friends receiving death threats, threats of physical harm to my family and friends and threats of sexual violence to my children on social media and beyond.
Speaker 1:So he then goes on to this big spiel where he ends up posting a picture of someone else who posted angel reese as a monkey on the cover of nba. Uh, the 2k ww nba edition. Nigga, you didn't have to do that, no, you could have said all of that. What you said, all of that white knight, grandstanding bullshit. You could have said that without reposting the picture, without showing the picture, even if you wanted to. There's a plus sign where you can add another additional tweet to when you post. And if you feel like you have to prove racism is happening, you can go on the next post and be like for the people who think I'm lying, here's the post. But then that at least allows your original post defending her to not also show the image depicting her as a primate like.
Speaker 2:And he's so fucking goofy and he's stupid as hell, and that's why I wasn't even mad at what shaq had to say about him he the the whole like thesis of a pair of essay that he wrote um goes into, like, I guess, his history with angel reese and their, their troubles and the back and forth that they've had and stuff like that which, like why, why do you have such a like staticky history with this young athlete, this young?
Speaker 1:woman, and we see why because, like I said, he's talked about her and Caitlin Clark. He has framed the conversation in a particular way and I'm not mad at you for talking about Angel Reese, because you're not. You don't have a job. You're doing content on your own, independent, so salute to that. We understand that. Ok, when you find you find a subject that's getting you traction, you should stay on it. I'm not mad at that either, but this is stupidity, like you're trying to do something in regards to being virtue, signaling white knighting, all of that To then it's empty. When you post the picture again, you don't do anything about it. I'm not mad at what Shaq I'm about to play, what Shaq had to say about it.
Speaker 2:Because y'all know, shaq, that's, her little that's her big homie, that's his little sister.
Speaker 5:Yeah, oh speaking of man RG3, tweet another monkey post about my girl angel reese. I'm punching your fucking face. Okay, period, that's enough. Like I don't usually do stuff like this, but just stop it, bro. You got your job, you got your podcast. Leave my angel reese alone. I'm the one calling her and telling her not to respond. That's the last time, okay, thank you. It's not real hate. If you look around what's going on in this real country, that's's hate.
Speaker 5:This is sports. I'm not supposed to like you. It's a shame that all the stuff you did in your life you're going to be remembered for your podcast. You're going to be remembered for your podcast. That should tell you you're not that fucking great. I don't want to be remembered for your shit. It's a good podcast. I do not.
Speaker 8:Yeah.
Speaker 5:Leave. Yeah, don't indulge with these fools, because he's a fool. You don't even have g14 classification to say that. I respect it more if lisa leslie said it like that's y'all category.
Speaker 1:Stay out of fools because he's a fool so no, it's, he goes and just kind of shitting on rg3 some more and again, I don't have a problem with rg3 having conversations around angel reese. I just have a problem with like trying to manipulate the public when you know you've only wanted to see this girl essentially lose.
Speaker 2:And then apparently I don't watch any of the sports, but she's been killing this season.
Speaker 1:She's gotten better. Yeah, she's had a little resurgence as of late.
Speaker 2:Yeah, like she, she's obviously putting in work, so it just seems like nitpicking bullying. You're going out of your way to have beef with this young black woman, which is weird, um, yeah it's just it's just it's. He's a, it's a corny nigga move.
Speaker 1:Also, too. I seen a lot of y'all niggas trying to side with shack on this when y'all was calling him weird and nasty for the quotes that y'all took out of context about him and angel reese. They made him look creepy because we talked about that here on the show yeah, and I called them creepy, but then when you listen to it, it wasn't that great creepy and y'all should be, I was sitting here thinking to myself all these people, oh yeah, shack, oh, we on your side.
Speaker 1:Like bro, y'all was the main ones talking about Angel Reese bringing her down, telling her she wasn't good, calling her mid, all of this other stuff. But now, when Shaq say this about RG3, now okay, now we, we on her side, I ain't like that. That was the one thing I didn't like about that. Uh, I seen a lot of a lot of folks changing. They tune on it again. Rg3 big. That was the dumb move that you did. I'm not against that. I'm not against people outlining and showing hey, bro, you did something really stupid right there. What I am against, though, is this idea like folks were saying just as vile things. Like joe budden called her a bird. He was like. They was like this the new magic bird. It's like oh no, it's magic and a bird, and I'm like that's just as bad as the monkey shit no, it's not.
Speaker 2:You don't think so?
Speaker 1:no, I think monkey, you know what do you think a bird is. What do you when someone calls a girl a bird? What do you think that is? I?
Speaker 2:was like I got a hood bitch so I think. I think monkey is like more. It's nastier and more racially fueled than bird. Bird is sexually charged, is it? Yeah, I've never thought of bird is sexually charged. What do you a?
Speaker 1:bird is not something that you just, whatever you fucking on just a bird, that's nothing like that's, that's exactly what that is.
Speaker 2:To me, a bird is just like a basic hood bitch yeah, that but you. But it has nothing to do with anything sexual value.
Speaker 1:No, it's a bird, it's something that you.
Speaker 2:Y'all tell us in the comments, because to me bird has never equated to anything sexual like bird is definitely sexually charged.
Speaker 1:No, not to no, I would, definitely I would, and my history of seeing people use the word is definitely sexually charged I wouldn't agree with you.
Speaker 2:I would agree that bird is. You don't know my history. I I would agree.
Speaker 1:I would say that bird is like, um, like a ghetto, like ghetto, it's like, it's the same, it's the same family I feel like there's there's a little bit in between those two, but so, uh, we got to get into nick quintet and candace owens. Did you see any of those clips of those interviews going around? Of course not. I was totally disappointed. Of course I didn't. No, I was totally disappointed.
Speaker 1:I've said on this show before that Nick Fuentes Is probably one of my top white supremacists that I enjoy listening to or just watching little snippets and clips Because of the manner of which he expresses it. This right there. He didn't do Like you. Really, you didn't show your ass at all, nick fuentes. You tucked your little pencil peckerwood dick in and I was disgusted. Like this is what I expect when I hear nick fuentes and I think about him going on candace owen show, knowing that they've had little you know snips here and there at each other. I expected this for him to say. I expect him to go and be like look here, black baboon. Only reason I'm on your show is because there's white, there's white lost souls that watch you and I need to bring them home. Like that's what I thought, the kind of energy he was going to bring in, like a black bitch baboon, okay like I'm thinking that's what he's coming with, so what energy did he bring into the interview that surprised?
Speaker 1:you so much. The most pathetic peckerwood whiny ass. He's over here trying to take back certain statements. It was disgusting, it was vile, it was a sickness. I'm going to play a little bit for you, just so you can kind of get an idea of Nick Fuentes.
Speaker 7:I mean, I personally and this would be me lecturing but I just feel like you really have no idea who you are until you start a family, and whether that means just marriage, some people who are struggling to have children, okay, fine, but there's such a growth that happens because of that that I think it informs your beliefs in so many ways and I think that was a huge turning point for me. Like I wonder if I had been pressed with everything that happened last year, if I didn't have, like, the unshaken faith and my family, what would I have done? And sometimes, when I see the things that you say, I do think, okay, he doesn't take into account family, it's just Nick. Nick is in his own world, which can be, I think, a quite selfish perspective, which is fine. That's what you're saying. You like. Being selfish is another way to say what you just said.
Speaker 8:I like being selfish and I don't want to give of myself to somebody else which is to say I could go and start a family and drag them into a world of mine which is pretty chaotic, you know. I mean, is this really the kind of a lifestyle If I'm banned on everything and I can't make a living? I'm banned from banking?
Speaker 3:I'm banned from credit card processing.
Speaker 8:I'm getting doxxed People are showing up to my house trying to kill me, things like that and what's more. I mean, let's also get you know. I also don't appreciate the lecture. You don't know me, you know, so I know you're married, I know you're older than me, but you don't know me, you don't know my life, you don't know my situation. I don't think you're in a position to give me advice, especially as a woman. Honestly, I don't think women, you know this is something in the right wing. We say we're anti-feminist and then women go around telling men what to do or not their husbands. And you know I don't really buy into that ideologically, but that's besides the point.
Speaker 1:you know my it was more a lot of this because, like they, kind of.
Speaker 1:It seems like he was trying to push back, though it was a little pushback on it, but it wasn't what he does on his show. Like if you ever listen to him on his show, he goes crazy, he goes ham on his show where he starts like even then they had an earlier conversation at the beginning of it where they talked about dave smith. So dave smith is a comedian who's jewish, who's been highly outspoken about the conflict in palestine. He goes and says well, he's a jew. You know, at the end of the day he's still a Jew, he's still one of them. And she says so what does that even mean? Like, what are you trying to say? If he's speaking these words? He's like well, and then he goes to well, it's more so about tokenism Because he always, he can't stay on anything. He's a like personification of a Monty Bailey fallacy in the sense that he takes these points, these controversial points, but once you put any kind of criticism onto him, once you put any kind of scrutiny onto things that he says, he then goes into another position that's more defensible and he can never actually stand in his, his troop, and just to see that when he doesn't have his, you know supporters around him vocalizing and you know kissing his ass to see him fall and and fall back onto a lot of things.
Speaker 1:I've heard other white supremacists, when they get on tv and other people's shows, do where they show. I don't actually hate people like. Yes, you do, nick. You told me that. I heard you say it. You said you didn't want to live around black people. It's because you hate them like what are we talking?
Speaker 1:about here. Don't don't try to. Now. You know there's you, yay and candace, y'all. Y'all are the good ones. Don't try to good one. The safe face. In front of a color, you call that person a nigger, right to his face. If you that bold, that's the Nick Fuentes. I thought I knew that. I was familiar with.
Speaker 2:I prefer that type of racism.
Speaker 1:It's not even a preference. It's just who I seen you to be, and for you to just be a clown in just this sense.
Speaker 2:He started to just be a clown in just this sense. He started doing another thing too. Why? Why do you think that he let's like hypothesize a little bit why you think he decided to tuck his tail in between his legs a little bit with candace versus other than, like, he's not smart enough to actually stand against her, which, like candace, has proven to us, regardless of what you think about her, that, like she will argue you down, like she, she will have talking point after talking point and she'll, she'll, she's well researched. Well, we'll give her that hold on, I'll play.
Speaker 1:I got another clip to play, so I am.
Speaker 8:I am racist, I would say I believe in the races. I believe there are white people and black people and Hispanics and Asians and I think that it's a core part of our identity, it's who we are, and there's like this conservative reflex to say we're colorblind. Race doesn't mean anything and you know, pat Buchanan said this. He said it's not everything but it isn't nothing, and I definitely lean more towards the latter, which is it's. It really is a core part of who we are. Our culture, our heritage, our ancestors really is a core part of who we are. Uh, our culture, our heritage, our ancestors, our customs, all of it.
Speaker 8:Yeah, you know, it's not that I don't think that two people can fall in love from different races. Of course they can and they have throughout history and the races have mixed throughout history and assimilated. But for someone like myself, I always say on my show it's just my value. I want to marry someone that looks like me, that comes from a similar background, because I want my kids to look like me, I want my grandkids to look like me.
Speaker 7:But are you when you sorry? I just want to make sure. Do you say I'm a racialist or I'm a racist? You know?
Speaker 8:for a long time I would say I'm racialist. Now I just say I'm racist.
Speaker 7:Okay. So when you say you're racist because these definitions get changed around Racist, you know? Anti-semitism gets expanded, expanded. What do you mean when you say I'm a racist Because I think most people watching this would go, if you are a racist in the traditional sense of the term, why are you on this podcast, right? Wouldn't you just go? You know what? Candace is black and therefore I don't want to speak to her.
Speaker 1:Right.
Speaker 7:Certainly not. Going on to your show and saying why won't Candace have me on doesn't really seem to line up with the traditional sense of the idea of racist.
Speaker 8:So yeah, I'm using it, I'm being a little tongue in cheek, I mean for the purpose of understanding. I'd say my views are I'm a racialist. But I do think that we need to deconstruct this idea of racism in the sense that you know, look, you're black, I'm white, it is what it is. For my entire life, life, people been walking around in eggshells about the subject of race, about white people being racist. Can I say this? Can I say that? Can I have this opinion? And me, I'm sort of. You know, gavin mckinnis said it like this. He said you're kind of post-racist, you're sort of after this craze where everything was racist it's. It's sort of this recognition that we live in a heavily racial world. And you know, look, sometimes we have racist feelings. Racist feelings like I want to live in a white neighborhood, I don't want to live in a black neighborhood. They're all like you. Obviously it'd be a different story, but we think of a black neighborhood. We know what that means that's.
Speaker 2:That's offensive to me. I know candace doesn't find that offensive, but like me, the type of nigga I am, I would be like nah, I'm not. I'm not one of the good niggas, I'm one of the bad niggas. To you, I'm one of the bad niggas always I'm like nothing about me. You feel like a good nigga.
Speaker 2:Nah, I don't want. I don't want white people like nick flint has to think I'm one of the good ones at all. I want you to feel uneasy around me, nigga. Okay, so I have two. I have two things. I had to write them down so I don't forget them because you know I'll be forgetting them. His definition of racism in the beginning just believing that there are different races, racists, races that's not the definition of racism. I also looked up the definition of racialist and it's just a person who's with a prejudiced belief that one race is superior to others. That's racism. President's belief that one race is superior to others, that's racism. Like he tongue-in-cheek is not the right term for this, you're just lying. Um. Also, what has his position because he said that? Um, I was surprised that he said that a black, like different races, can fall in love and he's completely fine with that. He just doesn't want that for himself. What do you know what his position on?
Speaker 1:I don't even want to say that, but race mixing, like interracial dating, has been before no, he's always said that he's it's not for him, it's something he would never but he hasn't condemned it for other people before, because that surprised me that he would say it in a way like why would you want to be a white man and your baby doesn't look like you? Like that? He would say he talks around it. He doesn't have to be a direct on the point with it, but he talks around like.
Speaker 2:And another point that he that must suck for y'all, because as soon as y'all have um a baby with anybody else, it look like them. Y'all, jeans, don't be fighting at all.
Speaker 1:Fight back, and I think that's I think that's more so what they're upset with, and they'll try to paint this idea like no, that's 50, your genes it's just your genes are weak, so they're recessive.
Speaker 2:They're not dominant. Recessive genes. You are a mutant blonde hair, blue eyes, recessive genes.
Speaker 1:I hate to break it to you. You are a mutant. But he'll go into this, this feel about sub-saharan africa and I hate, I hate so much what the races try to do, because what they'll do about sub-saharan africa, and I hate, I hate so much what the races try to do, because what they'll do with sub-saharan africa is it's always never that part. So he tries to say sub-saharan africa doesn't have any written language, there isn't any like uh, monuments or people and all this other stuff. But then ethiopia has the oldest written document in human history, but then, but then it was never colonized. But then he'll say because he, somebody talked about this too on his show with him, he talked well, I'm not talking about that. So they, the ethiopians, had x, y. It's always. I'm not talking about this. Sub-saharan africa is this and sub-saharan. And then when you show what all of the cultures.
Speaker 2:What was going on?
Speaker 1:the fact that they try to paint sub-saharan africa like they weren't part of the middle, middle, uh, mediterranean trade. That's not true. You, pecker woods, couldn't figure out how to go through the sahara desert. They did. They knew how to get through the desert to bring their goods to the, to the, where the water was, so they could get payment and transport. You got this idea that you try to paint black people from africa, and especially sub-saharan africa, as less than is bullshit, because they were good enough to do trade with. They, were good enough to for them to bring people to you, for you to trade people for goods.
Speaker 1:And we took point where there's been an estimated about 12 million people were taken from africa during the slave trade, not just america, but to the um arabic world as well, like it was a two-part, two-front coastal system. And this idea, that one that the coastal cities weren't developed, like there wasn't, uh, business and trade. The fact that then you go into, because he'll say, oh, this is another thing too, that really pissed me off about his conversation he was having, because every time that candace would rebuke him or rebut, rebuttal to him, because he even tried to bring up haiti and say, oh, haiti isn't a developed country. What's going on haiti? And she, surprisingly, defended it. We're saying there's a lot of history that I'm not familiar with but that I've heard and I've been trying to research on that would say that no, haiti is not responsible for their own outcome.
Speaker 2:No, haiti has been under the thumb and paying france um back for god knows how long, for no reason.
Speaker 1:After we were the ones that were slaves not even just that, just the, the money that's been stolen, all sorts of resources but yes, because a bunch of people got put in power very corrupt.
Speaker 8:There's a lot that's been going on with haiti for decades so you don't think that there's group differences on average between the races. I think.
Speaker 7:Just to be clear, I think there would be group differences. If you took like we were talking about an American versus somebody who graduates college in Europe. There'd be tremendous differences.
Speaker 8:Not tremendous. But yeah, there would be slight differences. But you don't think that racially there's differences between races?
Speaker 7:I think yeah, because we have huge differences culturally. So, going to your point of saying I don't want to live in a black neighborhood, well, neither does lebron james when he gets money right and there's a reason for that because there is something that's happening culturally in black america.
Speaker 5:That's going on for a very long time um, but that.
Speaker 7:Thing yeah I would argue doesn't exist in.
Speaker 8:What about in africa and haiti?
Speaker 7:I mean, they're killing and eat each other in africa and haiti, everywhere where they are, that's one nigga I'd like to look into and I'm I'm pleading ignorant, but I've heard some things about what, when, what happened in haiti and what the clinton foundation did there. So I I think I'd have to look more into the history of strip that haiti of its economic power at all I just completely think I agree with that.
Speaker 8:What about trading power? There's not one country in sub-Saharan Africa that's successful. Not one. They're all least developed countries. They're all not true either.
Speaker 7:This kind of reminds me, and we could kind of flesh out this conversation together, and I'm not perhaps ready to have it fully, but I do remember going back to Dave Smith where he was conceding a point on, well, all of these other Middle Eastern countries, no, you wouldn't want to live there, you want to live in Israel. In my mind, I'm going because you just keep bombing the crap out of them if they ever try to get ahead. I remember watching this clip of him saying that, going why don't these countries get ahead? And kind of going back in my mind to the Gaddafi speech where he keeps speaking essentially about you know, here's what we got to do in Libya to get ahead. Here's what we're going to do with the dollar, and we're going to be progressive and this and that and they killed them.
Speaker 7:That's such bullshit and then what happened to those Libyan refugees? Suddenly they're now pouring into. Just like he said, was going to happen. They're now pouring into the European continent and Europeans are complaining. Who are these people?
Speaker 8:So I want y'all to listen to his response and how he responds to this just like you would say I don't know. That just sounds, I mean being honest with you that just sounds to me like a left-wing argument. When they say why don't these countries get ahead? Colonialism you're you know you're a colonizer. It's like okay, but when we got there they had no development we got to africa. They had no technological development.
Speaker 7:You fucking liar that even if we weren't at war, if we we had done touch, done nothing in terms of the Middle East, that they would just be savages and just be like. You know, america didn't do anything to set, it doesn't set anything backwards. You're just like bombing a place.
Speaker 8:Yeah, kind of I think that we did set them back, because when they don't have political order, yes, but then we did set them back. Development and investment and things like that political order. He says, yes, but then we did development and investment and things like that. But you know, again, when you look at the antecedents of all these, you know the history didn't start, like you said, with world war ii in the 20th century. There's a reason that european civilization created this enormous gap between them and everybody else.
Speaker 2:And there's an american privilege that he, I think is, is um operating from where he can't even compute?
Speaker 1:no, but he can't. I'm gonna tell you how. So they talk about the iq thing and it was real interesting because he he brings it up as a matter of fact in regards to hey, you know, these people have bad, I have low iqs. That's why they perform this particular way. So she turns it on candace, does a really good job of turning on him and says well, if that's the case, we, the Jewish people, who you're so negative against, they have higher IQs than most white people. They have some of the higher IQs of most white people. So they could just say you're just peddling conspiracy theory because you're inferior. And then he said well, iq has a lot of different ways to look at it.
Speaker 4:So I mean oh so. And then he said well, iq has a lot of different ways to look at it.
Speaker 1:So I mean, oh so now, now your point changes. Now it changes in the midst of the whole conversation. Now, iq is not this definitive thing anymore that you can use to apply it once. It shows that you are inferior, and that's what I'm saying. Whereas, like, nick fuentes is a clown in that regard, and most it's not even his fault because the the point that he tries to attach himself to they're all clowns, like when you, when you are conservative, you kind of put the red nose in the hair on, you know you're being a dumbass clown. And it was just hilarious to me to just kind of see that happen full circle, because it was literally like in the moment where he says this thing and pulls it back and it's like he has to pull them back, though, because all of the points that he's making are not based in fact.
Speaker 1:Yeah, he's a shrewdinger's christian yeah that's exactly what he is. What is that? It's when a person who says like these grandiose things, shrewdingers, it's like, you know, the shrewdinger's cat. It's a playoff of that, that expression, whereas like the shrewdinger's cat is such like this experiment that I can't think of the.
Speaker 2:I'm a good Google. Yeah, I can't think of the experiment.
Speaker 1:But a Schrodinger's Christian is somebody who makes these grandiose statements, but then once you apply any level of logic or reason to it, then you show that it doesn't fall through. So like that's exactly who Nick is. That's like what you have to be to be a christian uh, a conservative in this movement at this day and time, because the most convenient argument having just the a little bit of factual information tears down all of their stances.
Speaker 2:what I just looked, looked up schrödinger's cat and now I have more questions than I had before. I knew what it was, but that's not what we're talking about.
Speaker 1:But schrodinger's cat is just basically like if you put a cat in a box or something can let me okay, let me just really quickly to you guys.
Speaker 2:So schrodinger's cat is a famous thought experiment in quantum mechanics that illustrates the concept of superposition. It involves a cat in a sealed box with a radioactive atom and a mechanism that could release poison, killing the cat. Until the box is opened and the cat state is observed, it is considered to be in a superposition of both alive and dead states simultaneously, so like it's because you don't, because you don't know it yet Anything. Those possibilities Simultaneous? Yeah, ok.
Speaker 1:So that's where it was. And then, like I said, the Schrodinger's Christian is just somebody who stands on like a controversial take and then the most convenient argument just tears it down.
Speaker 1:So that's essentially what it is, and that's the day, especially with this one and then when I, when I called him a monte, uh, bailey fallacy, that's just a controversial take that retreats to a defensible position once it's challenged. So, like, those are, just that's what they are, that's what they live in, that's what their, their capacity is for. So y'all can say, oh, y'all, y'all don't understand nick and nick. No, nick is a fucking, he's a, he's a bitch, he's a peckerwood, he's a pathetic peckerwood. And he and honestly he, a goofy because he got on his show by himself and oh my goodness that the chest was poking of course, the chest his dick was swinging as soon as he she wasn't in front of him actually clocking him it was.
Speaker 1:It was so sick.
Speaker 2:I'm like this nigga, I wish candace would use her powers for good instead of cooney evil she can't help it, though she can't help it.
Speaker 1:It's the funny thing, because she'll do it, she'll have this like critical thought for everybody else, but then once it starts being black people, and then now it she just you know, she forgets it it's she. It's so crazy I don't know all right, so let's just wrap it up. I just want to give.
Speaker 8:I want to wrap it up this, this part here, just letting y'all hear the pathetic peckerwood nick fuentes himself discuss him and candace thing, but unpleasant and annoying and a nuisance, and I I don't think she's a good faith person, I don't think she's an honest person. I think she's full of shit. I think she's a bitch, I think she's a hypocrite. You know her whole shtick is make him a sandwich. That's her book. Make him a sandwich, and then she's a fucking bitch. You can't have it always like that. Make him a sandwich, but I'm not going to take my husband's last name and I'm going to be wagging my finger and telling everybody what to do. Ain't nobody got time for that.
Speaker 2:Nobody needs that and then you use like like a black aave term to end like get, get this motherfucker out of my face.
Speaker 8:Can a nigga live, please.
Speaker 2:This country sucks, that's enough like we got on here like what last week and was like we don't gotta platform unnecessary, fucking inflammatory bullshit like mexican ot.
Speaker 1:We don't have to platform he a little mexican too though we don't have to platform this either nick fuentes is a little mexican too, so we was just out here. Just there's just trash and I just thought that was hilarious. You're still my favorite white supremacist, nick. I just want you to know that. No hard feelings, you know what I mean. You can still hard feelings.
Speaker 2:You can still come on the show we'll trash you we'll call I'm gonna be a bitch to you way more than candace was so we'll call you tiny dick.
Speaker 1:You know we'll make fun of you. You know, come on I will literally make fun of your penis to your face let's have, let's have a good time, nick. Come on the show, man. We would love to have you, we'll put you up and everything. Uh, did you see what happened with?
Speaker 1:elmo elmo's um twitter got hacked yo he went full nick fuentes anti-semitic rant I think it said to kill all of them like jesus christ. I did not know elmo was. I didn't. I was not familiar with your game, elmo, I really wasn't. And it's it's crazy because I know I know those people starting to feel really attacked after you know what's been happening on with the superman movie okay, so we gotta we gotta get into that.
Speaker 1:Yeah, we gotta. We gotta talk about the superman. I went to go see that. Took my little nephew to go see the superman movie. My baby she, you know we didn't she wasn't up for the night that we were supposed to go to it was a long week.
Speaker 2:Yeah, take your hair out. Yeah, I had to take those braids out.
Speaker 1:They was stressing me out and so we, uh, but I went to go see superman and I like I just wanted to brief, I enjoy myself with it. I'm a big superman fan. Um, it's kind of funny like I always feel like a nerd when I reveal this, but Superman is my favorite superhero. He's always been my favorite superhero, even when I felt like me personally have failed to live up to those expectations. I've always felt like someone trapped in the Joker but who desired to one day be a Superman. That's how I've always looked at myself in the mirror.
Speaker 1:I've always looked up to just what the principles of superman were, and I do want to say like this movie encapsulated what I feel like makes for a superman movie, and a superman movie to me in its truest sense, is an individual who has the power to do something but chooses not to for sheer like humbleness, uh, and the type of person he was. I think this superman like totally shows that in that regard where it's like, yeah, he could be this mean bully, take people out, you cross him, he destroyed, and he doesn't do that like he. He understands the situation so well in real time, and actually I was a big, big, big fan of this movie. I was glad I got to see it with my nephew. Oh, I think he really enjoyed it too and I just I'm not mad at david corn sweat man, you did your thing, big dog. Appreciate that, james gunn.
Speaker 1:We, we talked about the movie beforehand thinking that that monkey scene was going to be like a big part or a big like uh point of the movie, plot point in the movie. It wasn't. It was literally like a gag. Yeah, you just saw the monkeys typing and it was over with like a lot of that stuff that people were trying to do to hate the film overblown way overblown I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Speaker 2:From what I saw the most is um the like themes in the movie and how political they were. So do you think that, like from somebody who actually watched the movie, do you think that it was like political and like woke?
Speaker 1:like everybody kept trying to say that, honestly, I did not feel like this superman movie was woke at all, like to me the elements that a lot of people try to pull out from it is like oh, this was a pro you know Palestinian movie or pro whatever.
Speaker 2:It was. It was a. What I saw was it was anti-Israel.
Speaker 1:Yeah, oh, anti-israel movie and to me, besides the one scene that looked was familiar with the 2018 border resistance that occurred actually in real life 18 border resistance that occurred actually in real life. Besides that one scene, it was very, very vague and to me the real question wasn't a palestine, israel, russia, ukraine thing, was just that war was bad, and for y'all to call that woke is insane. Like war being bad has been the mainstream since we made a song saying War, what is it good for? Absolutely nothing. Say it again now. We've been saying that war is bad.
Speaker 2:Hold on one second, just real quick. They were saying war.
Speaker 1:In that song.
Speaker 2:I didn't know what they were saying, what's good for? But also I think I've only seen, I've only heard that song in maybe rush hour yeah so like I didn't know wow, I thought you were gonna say we are the world, we are the children no like but but being anti-war has not.
Speaker 1:That's literally been superman, that's always been his stick. So for people to say that the idea that it's a reflection of real life again besides that last scene in the third act to say it's a reflection only shows how far off the rocker reality is gone. So another point that people may say like is very the same as in the movie, lex luther is promised a part of the land that they're about to conquer and he changes the name to like. Lex luther is promised a part of the land that they're about to conquer and he changes the name to like lex luther, though, or something like that. He changes the name.
Speaker 1:It names the country after him and people will say something lex would do for sure but that was something trump did, where he did that ai of the gaza strip, where he was showing all those trump signs and saying we're going to make it into a uh, a resort we're gonna turn yeah, I remember that resort.
Speaker 1:That's because the nigga is a super villain, crazy in real life, not because they're. This movie was written three years ago. They were not saying oh, we're making fun of trump and elon musk. These men have embodied the ideas of criminals yes, of not criminals.
Speaker 2:Villains, yes, super villains yeah, they're not criminals, are are mind pop at this point.
Speaker 1:They're villains and I feel like people, people have, uh, people think that this is anti-israel, because this is the conflict that is top of mind and, if anything, the conflict has more similarities to the russia ukraine, and so that's why I said like I think this is where when guys, guys, back in the day, when I used to go watch movies, people would look at the world and then write a story that was somewhat similar to different elements around the world yes they weren't talking about one thing, they were just talking about things that they were seeing and the climate has been.
Speaker 2:World war three is upon us for a while now. Yeah, so that's probably what they're.
Speaker 1:They're pulling from very eerie inspiration they're pulling from, just like I said, what going on in the world and I also hate to break this to you too, for all you clowns hating on a superman movie, that's always been what superman's done. He's fought against a ton of people politically, like the old superman used to beat up landlords I wish he still did that. You know what I'm saying like they used to go beat up the slumlords. But y'all wouldn't know that because y'all don't read superman okay.
Speaker 2:So another thing I kind of saw was he.
Speaker 1:Was he kind of like a pussy in the no, I hated that people were saying that, like this, idea that superman goes all out 100 at every fight is a myth that was created with the zack snyder ideals well, we know that, if you, because my husband's a nerd, he makes me watch stuff all the time and like superman, cartoons and stuff like that.
Speaker 2:We just watched a movie the other day a old ass movie where this man held back his power until the last possible moment. I was like you could have ended this ages ago, but that's, he does that all the time like the one of the.
Speaker 1:The end of the there was a justice league animated series that used to come on and there was a scene where Superman fought Darkseid for essentially the last time on the show and he says when it comes to you, I go all out, I'm holding back with mostly 80 percent, 90 percent of the people that I fight with you. I don't like superman.
Speaker 1:Dark side is what makes superman into a karen, like that's the only person that's the only entity that can turn superman out of his body, so I don't expect that from any other person except dark side. So this idea that people just kind of paint around superman, just I feel like it stems from being poisoned with a little bit of the Snyder, even though I love the Snyder cut like I love all of the Snyder Batman, superman movies.
Speaker 1:Those are dope movies to me. We are a Snyder household. I love the Snyder cut but I understand what Snyder was doing was a deconstruction. He was asking the question of how does someone of this great power become this, uh, person of hope? And a lot of people don't like that because the expectation is Clark Kent.
Speaker 2:Superman is hope embodied sometimes it's a little bit frustrating when you don't get the fully powerful thought out being and you, you only. You get like the, the person that's building up to be who you know that they're gonna be, and then superman.
Speaker 1:They say it in the beginning movie this is his first fight that he's lost. He lost it to himself. It was a clone nigga. Like what are we talking about? The nigga lost to himself? It wasn't like he lost to a new nigga. Like I'm just sitting here. Like what are y'all niggas talking about this nigga?
Speaker 2:pussy he lost to himself. There was a.
Speaker 1:There was a clone in this movie, yeah I need to go see this movie, so there's an ultra.
Speaker 2:I know that that's happened in the comics, like more than a ton, yeah, more than once superman gets mind controlled and cloned all the time yes, lex luther is like makes it of his business to clone.
Speaker 1:even he did one where superboy is his DNA and Superman's DNA into somebody's Gay.
Speaker 2:You're obsessed, you want to have a baby with Superman. You're obsessed, Lex.
Speaker 1:It's scary. In this movie, though, lex Luthor was, I want to say, one of his best performances of a Lex Luthor. He was so true in his feelings for Superman and you got that the entire time there was no like oh, maybe we can work to, he's a no. You make me feel small and you gotta die for that you gotta die for real, okay.
Speaker 2:So, um, the parents, like I saw things about, like how heavy the parents reveal was, and like their, their intentions yeah, so what happened was generally because of marlon brando.
Speaker 1:This is really why marlon brando in the original superman movies he was a big deal because he was a big actor at the time and having him in this movie was a big let me see who marlon brando is, because I know that name I know I know that's a white man.
Speaker 2:Okay, I just need to know which white man it is. Let me look it up and you you can.
Speaker 1:That's the white man uh, richard pratt, just suck. Uh, marlon brando's, oh, I don't like that rhetoric, don't say that, take that out cut that out.
Speaker 2:That's what I just. I just don't like it. If marlon brando was sucking richard pyre dick, then we could say that on the podcast. But I don't like that flip. That's a black king and you can't do that to him.
Speaker 1:Okay, I'll just beep some of it like. I don't like that at all. But a large reason with him is why jor-el kind of gets the in the movies that is a white man with a very large forehead.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I also. He's too old for me to know.
Speaker 1:Oh, I thought you would have been familiar, but he, uh, he's the reason why, a lot of reason why modern day people take jor-el to be such an important figure in superman's mythos.
Speaker 2:What they did in this movie is they had yeah, that's a superman's biological father oh, okay, jor-el, yeah, so what they did? They had uh sound like a black man, jor-el is it. Is it not jayel or Jor-El? Yeah? So what they did? They had you sound like a black man, jor-el Is it?
Speaker 1:not J-I-L or something, no, jor-el, jor-el. Yeah, because Superman's name is Kal-El.
Speaker 2:This nigga's name is Jor-El yeah, jor-el Jackson.
Speaker 1:No, el is his last name. That's the last thing. So they have bradley cooper be superman's father in this movie, and don't like that it was a woman from west world.
Speaker 1:I forgot. Her name needs to be more rugged, but it doesn't really matter because they're only in for a short bit. It doesn't matter. In the movie, lex luther exposes the second part of superman's damaged note from his parents, in which they instruct him to basically be a viltrumite and conquer earth and have a harem of women a Viltrumite and conquer earth and have a harem of women like that's, yeah, so that you can bring the people back.
Speaker 1:If you're the last of us, you need to fuck everything, everything so that pretty much turns the entire world against Superman, because now, instead of them feeling like he's this hero of justice, they feel like, oh, you've been massaging us to a point to where you can weaken us and then come in and do what you want. He could have been did what he wanted, but they don't understand that. They don't see it like that. They see it like he's working into a plan.
Speaker 2:OK.
Speaker 1:Because that's how Lex Luthor presented to him. And I want to say that was probably the only thing about that movie that made me feel like an idiot, because the whole time they keep telling us it's real, like five times, and I'm just like, no, they're going, we're gonna find out. It was fake, like that's not what they did, but they did it. They let it go. They let that. That was that's canon and in this, so his parents actually gave him those instructions.
Speaker 1:Yeah, they was like you need to, but that makes sense from his mama was like you need to get a bunch of wives and regrow the population of yes, with the strongest other species that you know, so that you cannot water down our powerful kryptonite genes? Well no, they wasn't my son. She wasn't telling him to go find wonder woman, he was telling him to go just regular human women let's go fuck on something.
Speaker 2:Yeah, oh, that's just something, everything. No, I would. I would have gave my son the same instructions if he was the last of us.
Speaker 1:Yeah, but it's problematic because there's like it doesn't. It doesn't feel like consent was a was a part of it, like it wasn't, like that was something that was a necessary requirement for if you can live for as long as a kryptonite can live.
Speaker 2:No, I'm saying. I'm saying you can only deal with women who give you consent okay, so I'm trying to see where you don't, you don't have to. You don't have to do the do the grapey shit like you have enough time to get consent and and um revitalize fruitfully the correct way the correct way when they call you the king there's no correct way.
Speaker 8:You see what?
Speaker 2:clark, can't look like that's prime white milk that's alien milk that's. That's prime white man milk. He's like he's gonna clean up. Go to arizona one time. I don't know why.
Speaker 1:I think the white whores are in arizona I don't know why most people it's because I lived in arizona for one year.
Speaker 2:Part of my um lore lived in arizona for one year. There was this one white girl, the biggest whore I've ever met in my life. She, just she, just like. If she could do a ice bath in in a cum bucket every morning she would well, arizona just isn't really the place you go to to better yourself. You go to arizona to hide from snitching on yeah, we went to arizona for one year to hide from, I don't know, my. My parents divorce don't pay.
Speaker 1:Don't pay my mans like that. Don't do that. Don't pay my mans like that my mans.
Speaker 2:It was my mom that moved me there. Yeah, but you said your parents divorce.
Speaker 1:I mean, someone could infer that y'all were running from your dad we?
Speaker 2:well, let me tell you something don't do my mans like no, no, let me tell you, I'm not I'm not doing.
Speaker 2:If anything I'm doing. My mom, my mom, tried to move us to Arizona secretly. She told me to not tell my dad. I immediately went and told my dad. I was like this bitch is moving us to Arizona. I told my dad immediately. He didn't do anything. Okay, he didn't do anything, you know. But I told my dad immediately and I was like we on our way to the airport, and then I, and then, when we got home to my uncle's house, I was like okay, we in Arizona now, where we supposed to be at. I kept him updated the entire time. Okay, so my next question how was the CGI?
Speaker 1:I don't think it was that bad at all. Honestly, the there was elements there that I guess some people could have looked better, like there was metamorpho who was part of that. He can turn himself into any kind of element.
Speaker 2:I think there was room for him to look better but besides that, I think they probably should have gave given someone who can morph into anything a slightly bigger budget I mean, it's not that the budget wasn't bigger, it's just if it didn't look good, the budget wasn't big enough.
Speaker 1:That's what I think it's not that it didn't look good, it's just his. In the comics his face is drawn a little bit smoother and I think they wanted to give it texture and make it look a little realer. So I think that's why it did. I just feel like a smoother face wouldn't have been as jarring, because it was a dark room to me I hate when they do that just give us what we know.
Speaker 2:I'm not mad. It was just give us what we know y'all spent, y'all wasted so much money trying to make something new, when we just want what we know no, but it's comic accurate.
Speaker 1:I'm not saying that it's not it's just more faux yeah, when you look at him, it can just be jarring in regards to it, just because I've never seen him in live action before this is the first time I've ever seen him in live action so it would like to say that the the cgi with crypto. It had moments where it did look a little rough, but one of the things I was upset with. But that's not what he like in a movie oh, I was about to say this.
Speaker 2:Look good. What are you talking about, okay?
Speaker 1:that's not what you like. But the crypto part, I wasn't mad at it and I actually kind of enjoyed what they were doing with it, but for the fact of that, there was scenes and footage shown where y'all punched the fuck out that dog and y'all didn't show it to us because of the, the, the screenings beforehand, the prior screening, saying they didn't. Nobody wants to see animal abuse. It's not animal abuse.
Speaker 2:It's a super dog, but it's a dog man. That dog should have got his shit punched in I saw. I saw something about the super dog, so crypto yeah, crypto so they said that superman made it his mission to rescue crypto because if cara sensed that crypto was in danger, she would have destroyed the entire planet.
Speaker 2:100, 100, 100 and I love that cara is so much stronger than uh kal-el, but kal-el is still lit like I just, I want, I just wish supergirl had like more, more of a bigger fan base, but she's a girl so her movie's coming out next year, okay.
Speaker 1:So the end of this movie ended with her coming back to earth and picking up crypto, because crypto was her dog. So that's where she comes back in and they give a little exposition where he says she goes to planets with red sun so she can get drunk and party, and so then she comes back and then she ends up reminding me a lot of you when you drink, like she came in with a lot of powerful.
Speaker 2:Yo my friend talking trash. My friend was like girl. I don't know how your skinny ass slipped away from me as as powerfully as you did a little snaky yeah, she was like, you were like, like, like butter. I was like, yeah, and then that's why I'm running.
Speaker 1:And then she called but then she called superman a bitch at the end of it.
Speaker 2:Good. Yes, I love that energy.
Speaker 1:Oh, my God, I think next year when we go see Supergirl I think it was Supergirl, woman of Tomorrow, but I think it's just Supergirl now, once we go see it, and it's the girl from Game of Thrones, the dragon show, oh, Mally or Mally, I don't know her name, it was Daenerys.
Speaker 2:No, was Daenerys no, not Daenerys, the girl in the new one.
Speaker 1:The dragons show the drag the ones that we seen. Oh, the younger daughter. Oh, okay, she was the younger queen her okay period.
Speaker 1:Yeah, she's gonna be playing a supergirl, so I think it's gonna be really good. I think it's gonna be a lot of change of pace from that. I hope that they take some of the elements this is why this is my theory that I want to see. I want to see her distress and her conflict stem from the fact that when she came to earth, she knew what the game plan was, but saw how clark took to the planet and so it messed her up, because now her whole goal and mission was to help him get laid and do all this and take over the earth. And now she can't do that anymore and now they protecting the earth and she also remembers everything that happened on krypton, and so she's conflicted also, why is she not getting like busted up into if, if kal-el by her cousin?
Speaker 2:no, by anything like if. If kal-el got that message, why didn't she get that same message also? Why is she not fucking her cousin? That's crazy no, but like if we're pretty sure incest works on krypton, but is the baby gonna not be strong as shit if?
Speaker 1:it's incest. It could be the reverse of his incest we don't know how incest works on krypton.
Speaker 2:Their genetics are completely different. It might create a super kryptonite.
Speaker 1:Superman said in the comics that the only reason he wouldn't marry Supergirl was because on Krypton marrying your cousin is illegal.
Speaker 2:Okay, so genetically that's probably not a good idea If it's illegal on Krypton because, they wouldn't make it illegal if it wasn't a bad thing. My thing is this too is we don't, I don't again, we don't know Krypton, kryptonian physiology I'm not for incest, by the way. It's just like if we're the, if we're the last two remaining of our species. This is gonna make a, we might just have to repopulate with some from babies. I don't know, I don't know that was insane.
Speaker 1:But I was just gonna add to that was if her physiology is anything similar to a human and how she carries, then it wouldn't be behoove her to fuck it fucked on, because she can only hold one child, or maybe two child, two children, at a time.
Speaker 2:So it would behoove her to assist him in laying and then fuck his kids okay that's insane yo when they get of age, obviously not when they children this is only in a dire situation of like, where you have to repopulate your species. This is not just like everyday la-di-da for me you know, like this is this is the like. You're the last human and you the only other person is your cousin. You gonna have to fuck your cousin. I'm sorry, I just am I bugging?
Speaker 1:sometimes the planet blows up for a reason. It's like no, we're not supposed to be here. No, let's just enjoy our time while we're here and then call it a day.
Speaker 2:Because if the planet died because of us, let's just die.
Speaker 3:Maybe we suck.
Speaker 2:Yeah, let's just live it up until we can't and then just die. Maybe we just don't need to exist in that capacity. But if it was an outside source that made this end, maybe they knew something we didn't you know. Maybe they knew something we didn't you know. You just, you just team, not fucking your cousin, which is crazy for a. Yo, young, I'm about to fire up on you. I'm about to fire up on you, young.
Speaker 1:You exist because that's crazy, that's crazy, that's wild. Don't put that on me. I'm putting that on your jacket. That's crazy, that's wild. Don't put that on me.
Speaker 2:I'm putting that on your jacket OD. I've been putting on your jacket for years. It's not you, specifically your ancestors. They're no longer with us.
Speaker 1:It's craziness, you're sucking the cup into the mic.
Speaker 2:I had to take a deep breath.
Speaker 1:All right, was there anything else you had any questions about?
Speaker 2:So Snyder versus Gunn, who did you enjoy more? Who you got?
Speaker 1:As a Superman movie and the spirit of the comic books. I would have to say, james Gunn, the Superman he created was a unanimously better Superman. The superman he created was a unanimously better superman. But what snyder was trying to do and I think it's kind of like important he was trying to tell a story of a character and I said this earlier. He was trying to tell the story of how do you get to being that hopeful individual. He was more of a world builder and like people try to also paint, like hit. The snyder version was like tougher than this version of Superman and he didn't take no nonsense and all that other stuff. I want y'all to go out.
Speaker 2:And it did seem like the Superman was a little bit more, like he had a little bit more comedic relief.
Speaker 1:He was a little bit more playful with it. I'm not going to act like he's not, but if you go back to what Zack Snyder's intention was to be for this universe, his Superman was going to raise Batman's bastard son with Lois, if that's not the most bad shit in the world like you can't say that's weaker than this Superman, like that was the game plan with Snyder.
Speaker 1:So no, this Superman is legit Superman. He holds it down, like the moments and again, I even teared up a little bit. I teared up a little bit in this movie when they had the scene where the little boy at the end of the movie was bringing the flag, you know, asking for superman to help save them, because I I have seen the world and so many horrible things, just like even today we was talking about israel blowing up syria and just to see these events happen and to wish that there was one individual who had the power to just make something different. It. This movie just resonated so much and it just told why Superman is important to the zeitgeist and why we need to have this kind of Superman. Be told, not the I'm a god and I need to be, you know, conflicted about what's going on and you know do the whole jesus motif with it it's like no, we need an entity that's better than jesus, like we need someone who isn't.
Speaker 1:You'd be wilding. Superman is is. From fictional character to fictional character, superman is 10 times better than jesus. Wow, wow, points. I'm just being dead ass. Bullet points. Give them to me now. How Okay. So Superman, if he had the power to, would not let starvation be a thing on his planet. All the things that God, the negative suffering that God allows on his planet, superman actively fights against.
Speaker 2:Okay, Superman versus Jesus on earth. Superman 10 times out of 10. You know, I'm going to agree with you on that. He's watching that little s***. What the fuck. Like what are you talking about Bro. This is absolute blasphemy, but I do think that, like before resurrection, no Superman will kill Jesus.
Speaker 1:Let him resurrect and kill him again.
Speaker 2:Before AD. I think Superman definitely got him will kill jesus, let him resurrect, and kill him again before ad.
Speaker 1:I think superman, superman definitely got him, I think as the resurrected son of ad doesn't mean after death it's not in the year of our lord.
Speaker 2:It's a latin word public schools taught me after death, before christ, after death. I'm sorry, that's that's wrong like. That's what I was taught, that's what I'm sticking to, so after death, because if the new york public school system stirred me wrong, I'm on them same streets still, because the fuck I'm just saying jesus is definitely getting his ass. No, because that's ridiculous.
Speaker 1:At doesn't mean after death, death, no, it means like it means a Latin word for in the year of our Lord. That's what that means. It doesn't mean after death, because what that would mean is before Christ and after death. That means there's a 33 year period of history. That's not quote, unquote accounted for.
Speaker 2:That's not true. You are completely correct. I know that's crazy I think um they just didn't want to teach us latin in the public schools. It happens, did they teach?
Speaker 2:you that in my private school year they told it was the year of our lord they probably taught us that in private school too, but private school was the school that I paid attention the least in, because they involved the bible. I was like this is not interesting and he's the atheist. I'm just the person who doesn't give a fuck enough to label um. Okay, so we're about to wrap up, but really quick, before we wrap up, I just could not like I really I have, I have shit to do in the morning, but I could not not mention conor mcgregor sending azalea banks a dick pic, not only an unsolicited dick pic, not only one, but two.
Speaker 1:In the second one he macgyvered somehow a weight and a string onto his tiny white penis like why are you comfortable getting because she didn't seem a little bit upset about this why are you uncomfortable, why are you comfortable getting unsolicited dick pics from a guy who was convicted of raping a woman civilly?
Speaker 2:I feel like azalea banks is just used to bullshit from white men, because for men in general, I don't know what's going on. I really I was trying to wrap my head around why. Why Conor McGregor, specifically Right, would send a dick pic to Azealia Banks out of all people, like, out of out of all people that you could send a dick pic to. Bonnie blue is the first person that comes to mind for some fucking reason. But, like, do you not think that? Like she would immediately post that? So then I thought about you remember when dave chapelle did his stand-up and he was like, basically, I fucked Azealia Banks.
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 2:But what type of pocket does Azealia Banks have on her? She must have the wettest. Like there has been. So many men, just miscellaneous men linked to Azealia Banks. I think Azealia Banks secretly has the best pussy in hollywood. That's my hot take for this episode. Because what is happening? Why is conor mcgregor like yo?
Speaker 1:I need that remember when she boiled that cat, maybe she put the water on her poom poom. That's exactly what happened. She put the water on there.
Speaker 2:That the juices bro azalea banks is, I don't know, but like dark magic, I think. I think azalea banks got that like super soaker 5000 for real and it's like hollywood's best kept secret. And that's why she's still on the scene, because even though she's blasphemous and inflammatory and a contrarian like a motherfucker and all she does is upset people, she still has some type of platform because she got that gush gush. I think that's what.
Speaker 1:I think we finally solved the mystery so you think that's why that white man slapped her that one time?
Speaker 2:who was that white man? Uh, she. She was probably trying to leave him and not give him that pussy no more. He was like bitch Get back here.
Speaker 1:Bring me that blessed black pussy.
Speaker 2:And then there was somebody else who spit on her.
Speaker 1:I think that's the same person.
Speaker 2:Russell Crowe.
Speaker 1:People were like what are you doing around Russell Crowe? That's exactly what niggas was thinking when they heard that story happen.
Speaker 2:Because she got that snatch.
Speaker 1:You think there. Just a word around town. I was like I might you got. You gotta get some of that azalea banks yo like you gotta get.
Speaker 2:You gotta get that zill. You gotta get that banks cunt. Your image is crazy, but she got a tightest pussy I've ever heard in my life and that's why she's always around, because why are y'all inviting Azealia Banks to anything ever? She got that.
Speaker 1:She got that grippy. She got that grippy, she has to. She has to. Well, white men kind of fall for, like girls with the hair that she be having, though, like that's really.
Speaker 2:They crypticize. She do got the soft, the hard wig, soft life hair.
Speaker 1:Yeah, like they really be falling for that. She do they be thinking like she's like a black barbie or something?
Speaker 2:yeah, they. They just white men don't know what good lace fronts look like versus black men. They be like clacking us they don't, they not sure?
Speaker 1:yeah they're not sure what else I was about to say about that too. Also, too, she does kind of like push her body in a way where she wants to be like white model. Fine.
Speaker 2:Because she got the boobs done and never got the butt done. Yeah.
Speaker 1:Like she does a lot of things. That's like old white woman, hollywood Old white woman, yeah.
Speaker 2:Not even old Like 2000s old white woman. Yeah, she has that traditional white girl body, like the traditional good white girl body, but that's never been a good body for black girls big boobs and no ass has never been a good body for bad for black girls for white girls that worked it low-key doesn't work for them anymore. The white girls gotta be evened out a little bit more, um, unless?
Speaker 1:you don't want a black man unless they're not talking. Yeah, they're not talking, they're gonna. They're gonna be all right. Unless you like't want a black man unless they're not talking. Yeah, they're not talking, they're gonna, they're gonna be all right unless you like.
Speaker 2:If you want a black man, you're gonna have to have some hip of some sort.
Speaker 1:If you're a white girl, unless the nigga is poor I felt like you was pointing at me when you did that a little bit, no you are with me, a black woman.
Speaker 2:I don't have no hips either, though they getting there, none of my pants fit. That's good. It's actually alarming, that's good.
Speaker 1:We're getting that weight on you, girl.
Speaker 2:I have invested money into the pieces I have. I was like I've been trying to gain weight for so long and I've been buying designer ready-to-wear and then I just now realized, realized and getting things taken in, and I just now realize that, like, if I gain weight, the designer, the designer ready to wear that I have purchased, I will have to resell my baby coming in like like I will.
Speaker 2:Literally, I don't. So I I think like being skinny has been a uh part of my life. For my entire life, I've always been skinny. Um, I've gained a little bit of weight. I think I'm having an identity crisis and if I ever get fat, you will emotionally feel it. No, you will. You will feel it emotionally if I get fat, I will be a different person.
Speaker 1:I will be unhappy you're not gonna be like one of those fat girls that like want to give love to everybody.
Speaker 2:No, I will hate myself. I'm I'm, I like I. I'm not emotionally prepared to be what I conceive as unattractive viewer, discretion is advised. I don't want to be fat, I'm so. Oh my god. I'm never gonna be fat, though we'll see what happens in pregnancy, but if I get fat, I will literally like be depressed, like I'm not ready for that. My self-image is too anchored in um skinniness and I know it sounds horrible, I know. I sound like a bitch, but that's just the way it is. I've never been over a size two.
Speaker 1:All right, you've been listening to Talk FNF TV. We do greatly appreciate you joining us, holding us down. We hope that we were entertaining and overwhelming, but I want to thank y'all again. Let them know what they got to do, baby.
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